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      Acute and potentially life-threatening tropical diseases in western travelers--a GeoSentinel multicenter study, 1996-2011.

      The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
      Acute Disease, Adolescent, Adult, Africa, Western, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Asia, Southeastern, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Communicable Diseases, Emerging, diagnosis, epidemiology, Databases, Factual, Dengue, Female, Humans, Infant, Leptospirosis, Malaria, Falciparum, Male, Middle Aged, Scrub Typhus, Travel, statistics & numerical data, Tropical Medicine, Typhoid Fever, Typhus, Endemic Flea-Borne, Young Adult

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          Abstract

          We performed a descriptive analysis of acute and potentially life-threatening tropical diseases among 82,825 ill western travelers reported to GeoSentinel from June of 1996 to August of 2011. We identified 3,655 patients (4.4%) with a total of 3,666 diagnoses representing 13 diseases, including falciparum malaria (76.9%), enteric fever (18.1%), and leptospirosis (2.4%). Ninety-one percent of the patients had fever; the median time from travel to presentation was 16 days. Thirteen (0.4%) patients died: 10 with falciparum malaria, 2 with melioidosis, and 1 with severe dengue. Falciparum malaria was mainly acquired in West Africa, and enteric fever was largely contracted on the Indian subcontinent; leptospirosis, scrub typhus, and murine typhus were principally acquired in Southeast Asia. Western physicians seeing febrile and recently returned travelers from the tropics need to consider a wide profile of potentially life-threatening tropical illnesses, with a specific focus on the most likely diseases described in our large case series.

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